“cool” some ways to use

How to use in-sentence of “cool”:

– It is very hot i summer, and cool until mild winter.

– Prairie Rattlesnake are diurnal in cool weathers, and nocturnal in hot weathers.

– John Gorrie used Gas compressorcompressor technology to create ice, which he used to cool air for his patients.

– The weather is normally hot and dry in the summer and mild to cool in the winter.

– Together, Giga, Ziggy and Rubi are part of a band managed by Cool Daddy.

– Holton has hot, humid summers and generally mild to cool winters.

cool some ways to use
cool some ways to use

Example sentences of “cool”:

– Many users keep their cool by using standard templates to warn vandals.

– The circumstellar environments of NML Cygni and the cool hypergiants.

– Bassett has hot, humid summers and generally mild to cool winters.

– Silver is one of the most thermally conductive materials, and because of this there are some cool experiments you can do with silver that show extremely well how thermal conduction works.

– The trade winds bring cool breeze during the day and the same trade winds bring warmth during the night.

– Their homes and palaces had water running in channels under the floors to cool the surrounding air.

– A hair dryer is a device which blows cool or hot air.

– These pieces are sometimes used to cool drinks.

– In the sentence, “it is a cool evening”, the word ‘cool‘ is an adjective.

– They have low body temperatures, sufficiently so that they do not require a scrotum to cool their sperm as most other mammals do.

– They sleep in cool caves or burrows during the day and hunt at night.

– An oceanic climate, also known as a maritime climate or marine climate, has cool or mild winters and does not have dry or hot summers.

– Oswego has hot, humid summers and generally mild to cool winters.

- Many users keep their cool by using standard templates to warn vandals.

- The circumstellar environments of NML Cygni and the cool hypergiants.
- Bassett has hot, humid summers and generally mild to cool winters.

More in-sentence examples of “cool”:

– Wetting the “yerba” by gently pouring cool water into the empty space within the gourd until the water nearly reaches the top, and then allowing it to be absorbed into the yerba before adding the “bombilla”, allows the preparer to carefully shape and “pack” the “yerba”s filtering end, which makes the overall form of the “yerba” within the gourd more resilient and solid.

– It has a mild climate, with hot summers and cool winters.

– They may also use only air to cool the working fluid to near the dry-bulb air temperature.

– Before he became an actor, Duncan was a bodyguard for celebrities including: LL Cool J, Jamie Foxx, Martin Lawrence, Will Smith and The Notorious B.I.G..

– The body has tried every strategy it has to cool itself down.

– The public side is called the “cold” side because it provides water to cool the generators at the power plant.

– Air moves around to the tubes to cool them.

– He also thought that the brain functioned to cool the heart down.

– In some Middle Eastern countries, people smoke tobacco with water pipes, which cool the smoke in water.

– The Baltic Sea for example is in a cool climatic area with low evaporation, has many rivers flowing into it, and on-and-off refilling from the open ocean.

– Some people think it is cool and try to speak or learn it even if they are not really familiar with it.

– Oakley has hot, humid summers and generally mild to cool winters.

– Bennington has hot, humid summers and generally mild to cool winters.

– Belle Plaine has hot, humid summers and generally mild to cool winters.

– They come in different flavors, including Nacho Cheese and Cool Ranch.

– Sun City has hot, humid summers and generally mild to cool winters.

– Here the air ceases to cool at -56.5°C, and the air becomes almost completely dry.

– It may be served as a hot porridge, or it may be allowed to cool and solidify into a loaf that can be baked, fried, or grilled.

– Komodo dragons have special resting places on ridges that catch cool sea breezes.

– During the day it stays in all kinds of undergrowth, but during the mating season in cool water.

– Hawker has a semi-arid climate with hot summers and cool winters.

– In this same year, Green Day went with Iggy Pop on two tracks for his album “Skull Ring.” They took “band therapy” talking for a long time to work out the members’ differences after accusations from Dirnt and Cool that Armstrong was “the band’s Nazi” and a show-off bent on taking the limelight from the other band members.

– Barnard has hot, humid summers and generally mild to cool winters.

– The river San Rafael is only 3km long but many persons go there during summer to enjoy its cool waters and part of its water is taken to the city of Barahona.

- Wetting the "yerba" by gently pouring cool water into the empty space within the gourd until the water nearly reaches the top, and then allowing it to be absorbed into the yerba before adding the "bombilla", allows the preparer to carefully shape and "pack" the "yerba"s filtering end, which makes the overall form of the "yerba" within the gourd more resilient and solid.

- It has a mild climate, with hot summers and cool winters.
- They may also use only air to cool the working fluid to near the dry-bulb air temperature.

– The episode then cuts to Upper Cretaceous North Africa, where a herd of “Paralititan” take a drink from a river to cool down.

– A dust devil “dies” when it eventually sucks in cool air from the surface.

– Due to its lower density, hot oceanic lithosphere does not lie so deep as old, cool oceanic lithosphere.

– Coats has hot, humid summers and generally mild to cool winters.

– Durham has a sort of mild climate with hot summers and cool winters.

– However, his portrayal of Peter Parker in his regular life has been noted as different than usual, with some calling his interpretation “too cool for Peter Parker”.

– Florence has a mixed Mediterranean climate and humid subtropical climate, with hot and humid summers and cool and damp winters.

– Talking about the song, he said, “I’d felt sad looking around Brighton and London where I grew up…remembering all those cool places that aren’t there anymore.” The song was recorded in Tennessee.

– Species of “Penicillium” are ubiquitous soil fungi preferring cool and moderate climates, commonly present wherever organic material is available.

– Jigardhanda, a typical Muslim cool drink is one of the famous drink from madurai.

– They enjoy cool climates in the summer and migrate to ocean coasts in the winter.

– It also has cold parts which cool the gas inside it and these are kept cold by a stream of air or water flowing over them.

– The cool mountain climate and plenty of sport fishing make this a likeable town.

– Fall River has hot, humid summers and generally mild to cool winters.

– It stars Robin Williams, Michael Gambon, Joan Cusack, Robin Wright, LL Cool J, and Jamie Foxx.

– Cottonwood Falls has hot, humid summers and generally mild to cool winters.

– The water is pumped into a cistern to help cool it to drinking temperature.

– Mound City has hot, humid summers and generally mild to cool winters.

– Bison has hot, humid summers and generally mild to cool winters.

– It was in an unfavorable environment, with cool sea waters and moderate vertical wind shear.

– Derby has hot, humid summers and generally mild to cool winters.

– This means it has cool to cold winters and hot, often humid summers.

“ensemble” some ways to use

How to use in-sentence of “ensemble”:

– Together with her former NDT colleague Václav Kuneš and manager Ondřej Kotrč, in 2007 Novotná founded a contemporary dance ensemble 420PEOPLE, and acted as executive director of the ensemble until 2016.

– From 1998 he toured around Russia and abroad with the State Academic Folk Ensemble “Rossiya” Russia directed by Lyudmila Zykina.

– There is an optimal ensemble of parameters that uniquely specify the state, and all other parameters can be derived from these.

– He worked in the United Jazz and Rock Ensemble and with Hans Koller, Albert Mangelsdorff, Volker Kriegel and Ack van Rooyen.

– In 1997, Novotná was engaged in the Dutch ensemble Nederlands Dans Theater 2 led by Jiří Kylián.

– She joined the ensemble of the Zürich Municipal Opera House in 1943 and stayed there until 1950.

– Holden will co-star opposite Epatha Merkerson and Yaya Dacosta in the ensemble medical drama.

ensemble some ways to use
ensemble some ways to use

Example sentences of “ensemble”:

– At the end of the 1950s, she and her husband formed a vocal and dance ensemble “Troika”.

– Singers often provided the accompaniment, though dancers might also be accompanied by an ensemble of such instruments as a violin, a drum, bagpipes or shawm, a forerunner of the modern oboe.

– Kavalee is an experienced Theatresports performer, and is part of the ensemble cast on Working Dog Productions’ improvised comedy show “Thank God You’re Here”.

– The series features an ensemble cast, which includes Dennis Christopher, Annette O’Toole, John Ritter, Harry Anderson, Richard Thomas Richard Thomas, Michael Cole, Olivia Hussey, and Tim Curry as Pennywise.

– He co-founded and co-directed the Theater Chamber Players in 1968ndash;2003, which was the first resident chamber ensemble of the Smithsonian Institution and of The Kennedy Center.

– It has an ensemble cast of main and recurring characters.

– A tie is part of an ensemble of clothing called the “suit and tie.” This outfit is worn in Western countries by men in professional jobs such as business, law, and politics.

– He was the director of the Berliner Ensemble theatre from 1977 to 1991.

– A pianist can play music for piano alone or play together with other musicians in an ensemble or orchestra.

– Directed by Wes Craven, the film stars an ensemble cast, which includes David Arquette, Neve Campbell, Courteney Cox, Matthew Lillard, Bonnie Somerville, Paul Rudd, Emma Roberts, Hayden Panettiere, Anthony Anderson, Adam Brody, Rory Culkin, Mary McDonnell, Marley Shelton, Alison Brie, Marielle Jaffe, Erik Knudsen, Nick Palatas, Britt Robertson, Aimee Teegarden and Nico Tortorella.

– He joined the Hayes Gordon Ensemble Theatre working as an actor and stage manager.

– The name of the ensemble evokes Czech origin – ” 420 ” is the telephone prefix for the Czech Republic.

- At the end of the 1950s, she and her husband formed a vocal and dance ensemble "Troika".

- Singers often provided the accompaniment, though dancers might also be accompanied by an ensemble of such instruments as a violin, a drum, bagpipes or shawm, a forerunner of the modern oboe.
- Kavalee is an experienced Theatresports performer, and is part of the ensemble cast on Working Dog Productions' improvised comedy show "Thank God You're Here".

More in-sentence examples of “ensemble”:

- He was best known as a member of the Human Arts Ensemble and Black Artists Group.

- With this ensemble he staged Claudio MonteverdiMonteverdi's "L'Orfeo" and published three recordings.

– He was best known as a member of the Human Arts Ensemble and Black Artists Group.

– With this ensemble he staged Claudio MonteverdiMonteverdi’s “L’Orfeo” and published three recordings.

– He started a jazz ensemble after World War II and founded a label, Metronome Records, in 1950.

– From 1972 until 1979, he worked as a dramaturge at the State Ensemble for Sorbian People’s Culture.

– The mosaic allows us to admire the choice of colours, the composition of the ensemble with turning movement and facial expressivity.

– In 1944, she became a solo-singer for the Ensemble of Folk Instruments of the Radio of Armenia, where she dedicated her efforts to the ensemble headed by Aram Merangulyan.

– For “Game of Thrones” he was nominated for a Scream Award for Best Ensemble and an ensemble Screen Actors Guild Award.

– Generally, a chemical species can be defined as an ensemble of chemically identical molecular entitymolecular entities that can explore the same set of molecular energy levels on a defined time scale.

– It features an ensemble cast, including George Clooney, Brad Pitt, Matt Damon, Don Cheadle, Andy García, Bernie Mac and Julia Roberts.

– She played the role of ‘Lenore La Motta’, the wife of Joe Pesci’s character, in the 1980 feature movie “Raging Bull” and Robert Zemeckis’s Beatlemania ensemble “I Wanna Hold Your Hand”.

– The ensemble included his wife Marie, as well as Nikolaus Harnoncourt who played the cello.

– A concert band is an ensemble for playing the instruments using wind.

– After Ensemble Studios had closed down, another game called “Age of Empires Online” was made.

– From 1957 until his death in late 2017, he was the 13th director of the Moldovan national folk dance ensemble Joc Joc.

– He was one of the members of the string trio Ensemble Epomeo when it was founded.

– Women wore the ensemble of Jeogori and Chima.

– The series features an ensemble cast based on the characters of Archie Comics, with KJ Apa in the role of Archie Andrews; Lili Reinhart as Betty Cooper, Camila Mendes as Veronica Lodge, and Cole Sprouse as Jughead Jones, the series’ narrator.

– Some of his compositions were solo pieces, and some were ensemble pieces.

– He led the Leonhardt Baroque Ensemble with the English counter-tenor Alfred Deller with whom he made one of the first recordings of some Bach cantatas.

– The ensemble organizes the participation of prominent foreign artists at events in the Czech Republic – such as Ohad Naharin, Abou Lagraa, Jo Strǿmgren, Ann Van den Broek, Sidi Larbi Cherkaoui and others.

– It is considered “a masterpiece of human creative genius”, and” an outstanding example of a type of building or architectural or technological ensemble or landscape which illustrates significant stages in human history”.

– UNESCO catalogued Schönbrunn Palace on the World Heritage List in 1996, together with its gardens, as a remarkable Baroque ensemble and example of synthesis of the arts.

– After World War II he settled in East Germany, after 1954 he lived in East Berlin and worked closely with theatre directors such as Benno Besson and Wolfgang Langhoff at Berliner Ensemble and Deutsches Theater.

– It was recorded with a large ensemble of musicians including only Patti Scialfa, Soozie Tyrell, and The Miami Horns from past efforts.

– In 1975, he was appointed head of the “Light Ensemble of RTB”, and since 1978 permanent conductor of the “Light Orchestra of RTB” until his death.

– The Highland League is the subject of a song of the same name by the popular music ensemble I, Ludicrous.

– James of Sibenik, the Plitvice Lakes National Park, or the Episcopal Ensemble of the Euphrasian Basilica in the Historic Center of Porec.

– Culturally, Tricky encourages a togetherness of societies, particularly in his musical ensemble of rock musicrock and hip hop, high art and pop culture.

– The ensemble performs regularly both abroad.

– Soon she moved to Vienna and joined the ensemble of the Vienna State Opera House.

– He has performed with Ensemble Epomeo all around Europe, Canada, and the USA.

– For much of his career, Ra led “The Arkestra”, an ensemble with an ever-changing name and flexible line-up.

– I don’t think the article at Simple needs long lists of aria and ensemble titles in Italian.

– An ensemble usually consists of three or four people with similar skill levels.

– From the standpoint of statistical mechanics, the internal energy is equal to the ensemble average of the total energy of the system.

– He co-founded the Negro Ensemble Company in the 1960s.

– Nott often conducts the Ensemble InterContemporain.

– He has a group called Silk Road Ensemble which tries to bring together musicians from different countries which are historically linked by the Silk Road.

– The men and women sing an ensemble in which they describe the plot they have made to tease Falstaff.

– The solo and ensemble categories change every three years.

– She has won a Screen Actors Guild Award for outstanding ensemble performance and the 2009 Satellite Award for best actress.

– In music, an octet is an ensemble consisting of eight Musical instrumentinstruments or voices, or a composition written for such an ensemble.

– It was developed by Ensemble Studios.

– It will be offered as an ensemble category for the first time in 2016.

– She won the Screen Actors Guild Award for Outstanding Performance by an Ensemble for the role.

– A musical ensemble is a group of people who perform instrumental or vocal music.

– He calls the ensemble an “all star gang” but says the “performances are generally quite bad.” It currently holds an 81% rating on Rotten Tomatoes based on 47 reviews with an average rating of 6.8/10.

In-sentence examples of “Telephone number”

How to use in-sentence of “Telephone number”:

+ He called the emergency telephone number and the operator told him that he did not need to follow Martin.

+ On July 21, 2000, the FCC made 5-1-1 the national telephone number for travel information.

+ It is the part of the telephone number after the county code.

+ If naloxone is prescribed to a person, that person should also be taught about how to prevent, identify, and react to an overdose, including how to perform rescue breathing, CPR, and how to call an emergency telephone number like 9-1-1.

+ Together with King Orgasmus, the three recorded a tape under the name “030” which is the telephone number for Berlin.

+ The university’s telephone number is +7 293 8913 – 29.

+ In Europe, the telephone number for emergency services is 1-1-2.

+ The standard telephone number in Australia has ten digits.

In-sentence examples of Telephone number
In-sentence examples of Telephone number

Example sentences of “Telephone number”:

+ When a person has alcohol poisoning, 9-1-1 or another local emergency telephone number should be called right away.

+ An area code is part of a telephone number in the United States, Canada, and the Caribbean.

+ Those addicted to alcohol or illegal or prescription drugs can call the telephone number and receive information on substance use, treatment facilities, and other drug-related topics.

+ When “The Civil War” by Ken Burns was first broadcast, his telephone number was publicly listed.

+ It has a 24-hour telephone number that is free to call for people who feel like killing themselves or have big problems that they need to talk about with someone.

+ It is also used in some other countries as an emergency telephone number for both mobile and fixed-line telephones.

+ When a person has alcohol poisoning, 9-1-1 or another local emergency telephone number should be called right away.

+ An area code is part of a telephone number in the United States, Canada, and the Caribbean.
+ Those addicted to alcohol or illegal or prescription drugs can call the telephone number and receive information on substance use, treatment facilities, and other drug-related topics.

+ If a person may have a tension pneumothorax, 9-1-1911 or another emergency telephone number should be called right away.

+ Their telephone number is 619-280-4100.

+ A telephone number in Belgium is nine or ten digits dialed on a telephone to make a call.

+ There is also a 999 emergency telephone number used in other countries.

In-sentence examples of “refine”

How to use in-sentence of “refine”:

+ On September 8, 2001, Titania occultationocculted a faint star; this was a chance to both refine its diameter and ephemeris, and to detect any extant atmosphere.

+ There are two basic processes to refine metals: Refining by fire, and refining by electrolysis.

+ The milk of a cow is believed to refine a person.

+ Karma is the best teacher, forcing people to face the consequences of their own actions and thus improve and refine their behavior, or suffer if they do not.

+ Chemical engineers refine the petroleum which goes through a heating process.

In-sentence examples of refine
In-sentence examples of refine

Some example sentences of “moments”

How to use in-sentence of “moments”:

– Come here for romantic moments and beautiful nature in front of scenic vistas.

– He explores the origins of such human characteristics as the lifting of the eyebrows in moments of surprise and the mental confusion which typically accompanies blushing.

– As a lawlegal scholar wrote later: “The ratification of the Twenty-First Amendment might be called one of the most democratic moments in American history.

– Many people who want time for prayers in public schools and government meetings use moments of silence so that some people can pray and other people do not have to pray.

– His career was ended in 2000 after taking a slapshot to the throat, an injury that required life-saving surgery moments after the incident.

– Losing the engines cut off power to the FDR at 9:16:00, while the CVR cut off at 9:16:15 moments before impact.

– This has often resulted in many technical fouls during critical moments of games, being benched and eventually pushing away lots of potential scouting chances due to her lack of control.

Some example sentences of moments
Some example sentences of moments

Example sentences of “moments”:

– The band’s memorable moments and performance were shown in their first DVD, “Frat Party at the Pankake Festival”.

– Julie and George find an article mentioning Susie’s father, Ben Willis, and realise that Ben was the man they ran over, moments after he had killed David to avenge his daughter.

– The female voice is used in moments with melody or chorus.

– Lucan, a Ancient RomeRoman poet who lived from 39 to 65 AD, wrote about moments of aristeia in his epic poem called “Bellum Civile”.

– Some examples where moments are applied involve levers, like seesaws, opening and closing doors, nutcrackers, can openers, and crowbars.

– The authors say that the reaction appears to be influenced by the polarity of the solvent, and this can be shown by the change in the dipole moments when going from reactant to transition state to product.

– This may be noting down positive moments throughout their day or producing a list of things to complete.

- The band's memorable moments and performance were shown in their first DVD, "Frat Party at the Pankake Festival".

- Julie and George find an article mentioning Susie's father, Ben Willis, and realise that Ben was the man they ran over, moments after he had killed David to avenge his daughter.
- The female voice is used in moments with melody or chorus.

– Still, his great powers was successful during the moments of his creativity over the absolute ruin of his physical potential.

– In the most simple form, the polar second moment of area is a summation of the two planar second moments of area,.

– It is named in both languages in different bibliography, according to the bilingual “statu quo” in different historic moments in Catalonia.

– The victory became one of the most iconic moments of the Games and in U.S.

– Please spare a few moments examining Joss Whedon against comments I’ve made proposing the article’s demotion from Good Article status.

More in-sentence examples of “moments”:

– While reviewing the edit a few moments again, I also noticed a tag in the edit summary that said it could be a potential spambot edit.

– Sometimes the final tribal council and finale are changed so they look like one event, until moments later the camera shows the studio audience.

– His two greatest moments of his career are his “zero to hero” victory in the 1991 PGA Championship, and his playoff victory over Costantino Rocca in the 1995 Open Championship.

– One witness, Gunner George Ridgway, said that Richthofen was still alive when he and other Australian soldiers reached the plane, but he died moments later.Miller, Dr.

– There are many beautiful moments in the opera.

– One of Eurovision’s most famous moments was in 1990 when Spain’s entry suffered a technical fault at the start of the song but it was soon performed without any further problems.

– Its moment is the vector sum of the moments of individual turns.

– The RAW XV: 15th Anniversary DVD was also sold that had the best moments in Raw history.

– This movie provided many moments for gymnastics.

– The principle of moments is derived from Archimedes’ discovery of the operating principle of the lever.

– England were the final qualifier against Belgium, as midfielder David Platt’s swivelling volley broke the stalemate with the game moments away from a penalty shoot-out.

– The wars were part of a great national crisis for Scotland and the period became one of the most important moments in the nation’s history.

– In the Buenos Aires International Theater Improvisation Festival in 2007 he directed the work “Prolonged Moments where he proposed short improvisational games and longer stories, Hugo being part of the cast with Ruth Coello, Juan Carlos Intriago, Karen Mendoza, Fabricio Mantilla, María José Pérez Pólit.

– The race is notable for memorable moments and finishes throughout the season.

– In 1976, Corinthians almost won their first Brazilian League title and the club’s fans played a starring role in one of the most memorable moments in footballing history.

– They are also termed broadly as moments of inerta.

– The event was described by “The New York Times” as “a burst of violence unlike any seen in the shadow of the White House in generations” and possibly one of the defining moments of the Trump presidency.Helene Cooper.

– The method of moments is simple and gets consistent estimators.

– The American Civil Liberties Union thinks that these laws that say public schools should have moments of silence are a bad idea.

– Many of the most funny moments of the show are in the first season.

– In the United States, some people say that allowing prayer as part of a moment of silence means that moments of silence can make it hard to keep the separation of church and state.

– The show is produced by Magic Moments Motion Pictures.

– This was one of the most remembered moments in opera of our time.

– Some moments and scenes in “Arlekinada” presage similar ones in “Petrushka”.

– In the last moments of his life, Toa Matoro used the Mask’s power to teleport the Toa Mahri back to Metru Nui and allow them to breathe air again.

– There is currently no theoretical model that explains the earliest moments of the universe’s existence.

- While reviewing the edit a few moments again, I also noticed a tag in the edit summary that said it could be a potential spambot edit.

- Sometimes the final tribal council and finale are changed so they look like one event, until moments later the camera shows the studio audience.

– This system is polled periodically and reset at precise moments to read an input.

– Colin Powell, a famous government leader, likes having moments of silence in schools.

– One of the more heated and notable moments of the race was a newspaper interview in which Hollings referred to Inglis as a “goddamn skunk”.

– Although insane, in moments of clarity he confesses to have done ‘something terrible,’ that Bertha Jorkins is dead, and begs for Dumbledore.

– It is released during intimate moments during orgasms and even hugs.

– It was often the composer himself, who would have conducted from the keyboard at important moments like the beginning and end of the piece.

– I am asking opinion on this statement and whether it should be kept, “Stalin’s death also came exactly 13 years later to the minute of signing Katyn execution orders on March 5 1940 at 9:50pm.” The page was fully protected for a few moments after I removed it and it was reverted by the user that added it.

– Each episode stars Whendy Sails of Channel 5 recapping moments in the series.

– There are many other moments like this in the opera.

– Stevenson’s most well-known moments happened during the Cuban Missile Crisis when he gave a presentation at an emergency session of the Security Council on October 25, 1962.

– Adding a positive peak can establish a good memory of an experience even though there may be unimportant unpleasant moments in between.

– She can think through things and look at options that sometimes evade Percy in his moments of battle panic.” This means she can think even when there is a fight going on, unlike Percy, and can find solutions to problems.

– Such moments occur because long periods of prosperity and rising values lead to increasing speculation with borrowed money.

– Trudeau’s family spent some moments alone with his casket before it was removed and driven to the Basilica, accompanied by ten RCMP officers marching alongside.

– The musical features much stunt work, including moments of “flying”.

– The story beautifully weaves various emotions and moments that a mother experiences while raising a daughter to give her a bright and a healthy future.

– Shams convinced Rumi that at certain moments it was possible to commune directly with God: Rather than believers simply being interpreters of the word of God, they could in fact experience his presence directly.

– The Principle of Moment states that when a system is in equilibrium the sum of its CLOCKWISE MOMENTS equals the sum of its ANTICLOCKWISE MOMENTS.

– Many scientists think that in the first few moments after the Big Bang, which created the universe a very long time ago, both matter and antimatter mixed together.

– Aha! moments cannot be predicted.

– In his last moments he granted Thrall the title of Warchief.

– His best moments in football was when he played in the Eliteserien for Mjøndalen.

– Produced by Magic Moments Motion Pictures, it started Prapti Chatterjee and Somraj Maity in lead roles, Nabanita Malakar in a negative role and Sabitri Chatterjee, Anusuya Majumdar, Shankar Chakraborty and Bharat Kaul in supporting roles.

Some example sentences of “packed”

How to use in-sentence of “packed”:

+ Dried blood is better for first aid during combat than whole blood or packed red cells.

+ The density measured by NEAR Shoemaker, 1,300kg/m³, is less than half that of a normal carbonaceous chondrite; this may indicate that the asteroid is very loosely packed rubble pile.

+ Enslaved people were then packed onto the slave ships.

+ Later they may be alternately washed with water and packed with salt.

+ Like all members of the family, hawkweeds have tightly packed flowerheads made of many small flowers.

Some example sentences of packed
Some example sentences of packed

Example sentences of “packed”:

+ The stars are too closely packed to get an accurate count, but it certainly has more stars than some of the smaller galaxies.

+ It is not easily packed up and carried away like a tent, or moved like a caravan.

+ Nowadays some of them are packed with styrofoam.

+ Apart from the rather big size of Linux, µCLinux is much smaller and not as packed with features as Linux.

+ The lower parts of the big leaves are closely packed making a false stem that is not made of wood.

+ Sometimes rose petals are dried and packed so that you can use them for decoration or for scent.

+ Even if it is largely a topical update of Kubrick’s Dr Strangelove, it had a packed house at this north London fringe theatre cheering it to the echo.”.

+ Their feathers are very tightly packed and make a thick cover.

+ In solid materials, the atoms are tightly packed next to each other so they vibrate, but are not able to move as atoms in liquids do.

+ For these reasons columns could also be packed with porous gels.

+ The stars are too closely packed to get an accurate count, but it certainly has more stars than some of the smaller galaxies.

+ It is not easily packed up and carried away like a tent, or moved like a caravan.

+ Anchovies preserved by being gutted and saltsalted in brine, matured, then packed in oil, are an important food fish, both popular and infamous for their strong flavor.

+ When the fish are all tightly packed together, the Silky sharks attack the fish with great speed, and often consume the whole group of fish.

+ The pia’s capillaries are lined with cells that are packed very closely together.

+ There Humpty Dumpty explains that some of the unusual words in “Jabberwocky” are other words packed together into one word, as two parts of a portmanteau suitcase are packed together.

+ The bombs are often designed with objects such as nails, or ball bearings packed in and around the explosive device to act as shrapnel.

+ These Furbies, according to the story they come packed with, are from Furby Island.

+ James Montgomery from MTV describes the video as having “a clearing in the forest, one packed with party people — of all races, colors, creeds and proclivities, naturally — who are all in the midst of a totally excellent celebration.

More in-sentence examples of “packed”:

+ During the Golden Jubilee celebrations of Queen Elizabeth II in 2002, over one million people packed The Mall to watch the public displays and the appearance of the Royal Family on the palace balcony.

+ Today, goods other than bulk cargo are usually packed in shipping containers, which are carried.

+ Most of the Voortrekkers were not satisfied with the British government that ruled over them in the Cape in those years, that is why they packed their ox wagons and started to trek to greener valleys to the north of current South Africa.

+ Indian warriors did not fight in the European style of closely packed formations of soldiers, but more often fought as individuals.

+ He said the south side of the wall is packed with soil, which permits access to the top of the wall and makes it effectively invisible from the south side.

+ An Shell artillery shell is a hollow ball packed with explosive and a fuse.

+ Klima packed all the poison gas in the cylinders and sent it to Alabanda in an attempt to cause internal unrest and of course a civil war.

+ This is a rare transparency and translucencytransparent look at the huge group of closely packed stars at the Sagittarius constellation.

+ Penguins have a thick layer of blubber that helps them keep warm, and their feathers are very tightly packed to make another cover.

+ Gases trapped in clathrates are enclosed in ice and look like packed snow.

+ In an effort to get their hair back, men have tried “cures” like applying strange lotions or even having their heads packed in chicken manure.

+ Times New Roman is packed together, with tall lowercase letters.

+ The blend of spices or “masala” for these dishes is often sold in markets or packed by companies to be sold in shops.

+ Their horns are not like those of other horned mammals: the rhinoceros’ horn is made of keratin packed together very tightly.

+ A formation can be divided into ‘members’ and are themselves packed together in ‘groups’.

+ Then the chromatin is packed up into nucleosomes.

+ Its genome is much less densely packed than any other known virus.

+ Items are packed in Osaka and then shipped worldwide.

+ In earlier times, direct application of charcoal was packed onto the metal for carburization.

+ The dermal denticles are small, tightly packed and over-lapping, giving the hide a smooth or “silky” texture, giving the shark it’s name.

+ He follows her to a Grand Hotel packed with women.

+ Traditional tatami are packed with straw.

+ The genome of the virus is composed of multiple segments of double-stranded DNA packed in capsid proteins and a double or single layer envelope.

+ The Romans tried to transport it into the Roman Empire in tightly packed pots, but failed, according to Pliny.

+ Marks Avenue until her family packed up and moved to New Jersey.

+ When the British left Philadelphia, André packed up and stole many of Benjamin Franklin’s inventions, books, and other things.

+ During the Golden Jubilee celebrations of Queen Elizabeth II in 2002, over one million people packed The Mall to watch the public displays and the appearance of the Royal Family on the palace balcony.

+ Today, goods other than bulk cargo are usually packed in shipping containers, which are carried.

+ What you see as a single daisy is actually made of several hundred tiny flowers packed together.

+ One of the largest known star clusters, Messier 15, has several million stars, packed closely together, with a black hole at its centre.

+ Meristematic cells are packed closely together without intercellular cavities.

+ Like all hadrosaurs its beak was toothless, but its jaws were packed with around 1,500 tiny chewing teeth.

+ The “Ocean” came back in December and Collins wasted no time in getting most of the convicts and settlers packed up.

+ Everything is packed very tightly and can barely move.

+ Though it could be possible that binary stars may form when one star passes very close to another, it is highly unlikely, and would occur only in places where stars are densely packed together.

+ On May 14, six days before the vote, Trudeau made his final appearance at a packed Paul Sauvé Arena, where the PQ had celebrated their victory in 1976.

+ That same year, Bridget packed up her bags and headed off to Rome, never to return to her hometown again.

+ The bombs were packed into rucksacks and set off by the bombers themselves.

+ The tightly packed and highly charged sulfate groups of chondroitin sulfate generate electrostatic repulsion that provides much of the resistance of cartilage to compression.

+ The courtroom was packed with his friends and relatives, both Australian and U.S.

+ The Cheyenne lived in earth lodges with wood frames packed with dirt.

+ The owners and reasons for burial of the hoard are unknown, but it was carefully packed and the contents seem what a very rich family might have owned.

+ Beehives have hexagonal cells in them, packed together.

+ Towards the end of World War II, the camp was so crowded that 1,500 to 2,000 women were packed into barracks meant to hold only 250 people.

+ The Hungarians won the Women’s Chess Olympiads, with a team packed with Polgárs, in 1988 and 1990.Forbes, Cathy 1992.

+ The black powder was packed in a closed tube that had a hole in one end for escaping hot gases.

+ The Backpack Program partners with schools and community centers to distribute bags packed with a weekend’s supply of food.

+ By then, the ground is hard packed and grows only a few weeds.

+ After he had graduated he packed all his belongings into his Volkswagen and drove all the way across the United States to California where he got a job as a forklift operator.

+ During the Second World War the collection was packed up and moved out of London for to keep it safe.

+ Frozen blood taken from the individual previously can be used for a later transplant; packed red cells from a blood groupcompatible donor may be used, and blood substitutes may be used.

“lisbon” use in-sentences

How to use in-sentence of “lisbon”:

+ Araújo Cabral died in Lisbon on 17 August 2020 at the age of 86.

+ Oliveira died on 18 September 2020 in Lisbon from a car crash at the age of 74.

+ The Algarve region in the south and capital Lisbon are the most popular.

+ Semedo died on 17 July 2018 in Lisbon at the age of 67.

+ Then he went to Lisbon to study law at the university.

+ Dina died on 12 April 2019 in Lisbon from idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis at the age of 62.

lisbon use in-sentences
lisbon use in-sentences

Example sentences of “lisbon”:

+ Almeida died in Lisbon from a heart attack on 25 September 2018 at the age of 84.

+ The Portuguese empire continued to be ruled from Lisbon during this period.

+ Salazar died in Lisbon on July 27, 1970.

+ He gave harpsichord lessons to the Infanta Maria Barbara at the Royal Court in Lisbon in Portugal.

+ The main cities it passes through are Aranjuez, Toledo, SpainToledo, Santarém, Almada and Lisbon in Portugal.

+ At its mouth is a large estuary on which the port city of Lisbon is situated.

+ He died without ever having purchased a motor car, the modest house he lived in Lisbon belonged to the State and is reported as having had two pairs of suits in his wardrobe.

+ However the BZÖ differs a bit in comparison to the Freedom Party, as they are for a referendum about the Lisbon Treaty but not, for an EU-Withdrawal.

+ The 68th landed in Lisbon on 27 June.

+ Almeida died in Lisbon from a heart attack on 25 September 2018 at the age of 84.

+ The Portuguese empire continued to be ruled from Lisbon during this period.

+ In 1807 the Portuguese royal family fled Lisbon when Napoleon I of France invaded Portugal.

+ José was born at the “Real Barraca” where the Palace of Ajuda in Lisbon stands today.

+ Schlee died on November 15, 2018 in Lisbon at the age of 83.

+ The city of Lisbon was destroyed in an earthquake in 1755.

+ The urban area of Porto, which extends beyond the administrative limits of the city, has a population of 2.4 million  Study Group, the only Portuguese city besides Lisbon to be recognised as a global city.

+ Giscard d’Estaing was a supporter of the Lisbon Treaty.

+ Pomar died at the age of 92 at a hospital in Lisbon on May 22, 2018.

Example uses in sentence of “busy”

How to use in-sentence of “busy”:

– He edited the first two magazines, but he was too busy to keep up with it.

– He was very busy conducting in Europe.

– After that, paste this stuff onto your userpage to tell everyone else here that you are busy on weekdays because of school and cannot change any pages.

– Parking garages are sometimes found near office buildings, hospitals, universities, police stations, and other busy places where land space is limited.

– They are the second most busy system of airports in the world by number of passengers.

– There are less than 40 active editors here on seWP; and the majority of those are very busy fixing and growing mainspace.

– I think her mentoring should intensify but we are so busy and so short-handed here it’s probably not possibel.

Example uses in sentence of busy
Example uses in sentence of busy

Example sentences of “busy”:

- Overall, Hathor was a busy goddess, as were most of the other gods and goddesses.

- As a result, the place became a busy small town.
- Unfortunately, Dan and Phil do not upload any more videos due to their busy schedules.

– Overall, Hathor was a busy goddess, as were most of the other gods and goddesses.

– As a result, the place became a busy small town.

– Unfortunately, Dan and Phil do not upload any more videos due to their busy schedules.

– It is on the Loire River and was formerly a busy port.

– Bus stops at busy locations may have shelters, seating, and possibly electronic passenger information systems; less busy stops may use a simple pole to mark the location.

– The orchestra were busy playing when Arnold noticed people were looking at his shoes.

– Charles kept busy composing.

– This area can become extremely busy at times.

– They may be found in busy market places, deep in forests, on lonely mountain roads, and nowadays, at airports.

– They usually did this when their warrior husbands were busy in battles.

More in-sentence examples of “busy”:

– The town has a busy Stafford railway stationrailway station on the West Coast Main Line.

– George Banks is busy in his bank work while Winifred is busy in her Women’s rights activities and both of them almost never dedicate time for their children but instead keep them with different nannies.

– The doctor is too busy trying to care for the thousands of wounded Confederate soldiers, so with only Scarlett’s inexpert help, Melanie gives birth to a boy.

– The bushrangers still kept busy robbing people.

– It was once a busy fishing port, but the trade declined during the 20th century.

– If you’d taken just 5 minutes out of your busy busy schedule, you would have seen in my past three messages that I told you excactly what you should do.

– After Rogers’ retirement in 2001, he remained busy working from studying religion and spirituality, making public appearances, traveling, and working on a children’s media center named after him at Saint Vincent College in Latrobe with Archabbot Douglas Nowicki, chancellor of the college.

– Sorry for being slightly away I’ve been busy lately.

– The band started working on new music, even with a very busy schedule.

– Ted Cruz said that the decision for him to run for president was difficult for his wife, because she was busy with her business career and raising their 2 children.

– Many Flemish painters from the area of modern Belgium were also very busy at this time.

– She was very busy in 2001: shooting “The New Guy” in Texas and having to travel up to New York where she was working again with actor Robert De Niro and director Michael Caton-Jones in “City by the Sea”.

– Rice Park was placed right in the heart of the busy city of Saint Paul.

– Later, he sold his businesses and became busy with science and politics.

– Bob is too busy shouting orders to notice.

– While Staunton was busy with the Shakespeare edition, he received a courteous letter from the New Orleans Chess Club, inviting him to that city to play Paul Morphy, who had won the first American Chess Congress.

– The Allies planned to attack together, but the French were busy with the Battle of Verdun, so the main attackers were British.

– In later life, Fitzgerald kept a busy concert schedule, but her health worsened.

– Its noisy, busy and you can always try everything before you buy.

– Keoua Ku‘ahu‘ula tried to take over his land while he was busy fighting, but Kamehameha was able to come back with his men in time.

– Modern drawbridges are often built across large, busy waterways.

– Terry announced then that he would not return for another season because of his busy schedule.

– I may be very busy at times, and editing here is really a hobby.

– Ferdinand was busy in the last decades of his life with the so-called Italian Wars.

– A large, organised, group of vehicles will travel a busy route at very slow speed.

– Two months ago I pretty much became inactive, because I was busy planning to move across the province, and last month I had my admin tools removed because I was actually moving and didn’t have internet, except for my smartphone.

– So I’ve been really busy with school and already I have done things I shouldn’t have here, so for that I apologize.

– At one time, the town of Port Leon was a very busy cotton-shipping hub.

– He spent a lot of time composing there, away from the busy life in Brno.

– Thought I’d be able to pick up my editing again in the near future, but I’m very busy and I’m not sure that’s really going to happen very soon.

– The other three groups were busy with following the retreating Confederates.

– Because the guide dog and handler will be in public, it is important that the dog stays calm in busy or loud areas.

– Unfortunately, he has to go alone because both Zak and Maria are busy the night of the celebration.

– He moved back to the forges because he did not like the busy life of the palace.

– Bryan Singer asked John Williams to composercompose the music for the movie, but Williams was too busy composing for “Saving Private Ryan”.

– The RAF were very busy during World War II.

– Spain was busy fighting for its independence against the invading First French Empire during the Peninsular War and most of Latin America revolted.

– Roughly halfway along Oxford Street is Oxford Circus, a busy intersection with Regent Street.

– One of Black Douglas’s tricks was to rob the tents of miners during the day while they were busy digging for gold.

– She originally had the release set for fall 2002 but got pushed back due to her busy schedule.

– Present day Shahdara is a busy area with a market and factories nearby.

– The trains and platforms at Brétigny were very busy as it was the Friday before the Bastille Day holiday weekend.

– Would any bureaucrat who isn’t too busy be so kind as to desysop me per this? : It’s always been my firm opinion that an administrator ought to be active, and I don’t think I can be so anymore.

– And i do not need find more customer as already busy enough with existing.

– Finsbury Park Station is a busy transport interchange in North London.

– Frumble in “The Busy World of Richard Scarry”, Professor Coldheart in the early “Care Bears” series by DiC Entertainment, and “Rocket Robin Hood” in some of the third-season episodes.

– Apple has been busy fixing it so users can trust it, and nowadays Apple Maps is used 3.5 times as much as Google Maps on devices Apple Maps is supported.

- The town has a busy Stafford railway stationrailway station on the West Coast Main Line.

- George Banks is busy in his bank work while Winifred is busy in her Women's rights activities and both of them almost never dedicate time for their children but instead keep them with different nannies.
- The doctor is too busy trying to care for the thousands of wounded Confederate soldiers, so with only Scarlett's inexpert help, Melanie gives birth to a boy.

Some example sentences of “leukemia”

How to use in-sentence of “leukemia”:

– Shepard suffered with leukemia in 1996 and died on July 21, 1998 in Pebble Beach, California.

– Bacalov died in Rome on 15 November 2017 of leukemia at the age of 84.

– Nudelman died in Kiryat Shmona, Israel on 14 February 2019 from acute myeloid leukemia at the age of 80.

– He died 5 December 2017 of complications from leukemia in Aubonne, SwitzerlandAubonne, Switzerland at 96 years old.

– Some of those diseases were leukemia and herpes.

– About a third of those suffering contract leukemia within a few months to a few years.

– Wright died on January 23, 2019, from acute myeloid leukemia at a hospital in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, aged 71.

– Calandra died in Aprilia, LazioAprilia, Lazio on 25 November 2018 from leukemia at the age of 82.

Some example sentences of leukemia
Some example sentences of leukemia

Example sentences of “leukemia”:

– On February 9, 2016, it was revealed Watanabe, a leukemia survivor, had been diagnosed with stomach cancer.

– Larriva died in Cuenca on 6 January 2020 of leukemia at the age of 74.

– Augustine, Florida from leukemia at the age of 85.

– Rodgers died in San Diego on June 26, 2018 from leukemia at the age of 80.

– Perot died on July 9, 2019 at his home in Dallas from leukemia at the age of 89.

– Raft died in Los Angeles, California of leukemia on November 24, 1980 at the age of 79.

– Górski died in Warsaw, Poland from leukemia on 1 April 2016, aged 46.

- On February 9, 2016, it was revealed Watanabe, a leukemia survivor, had been diagnosed with stomach cancer.

- Larriva died in Cuenca on 6 January 2020 of leukemia at the age of 74.

– Hynes died on January 29, 2019 at a hospital in Delray Beach, Florida following heart surgery and undergoing treatment for leukemia at the age of 83.

– Christensen died on January 23, 2020 from leukemia treatment-related problems in Boston at the age of 67.

– He died at a Cairo hospital from chronic lymphocytic leukemia on July 27, 1980 at the age of 60.

– Faheem died on 21 November 2015 from leukemia after being admitted to a hospital in Karachi, Pakistan under ICU at the age of 76.

More in-sentence examples of “leukemia”:

– She was diagnosed with leukemia and died on 20 September 1999 at Münster University Hospital in Germany, aged 67.

– Matthiessen died on April 5, 2014 from leukemia in Sagaponack, New YorkSagaponack, New York, aged 86.

– Gold died from leukemia on February 14, 2021, at age 47.

– This wikimedia project is in need of massive expansion of medical coverage, as already after only 2 days here I have realized that the article on Brain tumor is missing, and the article on Leukemia is very poor-quality and is still a stub.

– Briel died of leukemia in Minneapolis, Minnesota on February 15, 2018 at the age of 71.

– Fantastichini died of leukemia in Naples on 1 December 2018, aged 63.

– He died of leukemia in Montreux, Switzerland.

– Knapp died in Worcester, Massachusetts on November 24, 2017 of complications from acute myeloid leukemia at the age of 70.

– Landry died in Dallas, Texas on February 12, 2000 of leukemia at the age of 75.

– Russ died from acute myeloid leukemia on January 5, 2017 in Conway.

– Sacal died of leukemia in Mexico City on 4 October 2018 at the age of 74.

– Fowler died on December 15, 2020 from leukemia in Columbia, South Carolina at the age of 85.

– On April 1, 2018, Bochco died of leukemia in Los Angeles, California.

– García died from leukemia on 8 January 2018 at the age of 29.

– Cisek died on February 28, 2020 in Warsaw of leukemia at the age of 65.

– Thomas died of leukemia on June 4, 2007 in Bethesda, Maryland, aged 74.

– Chronic leukemia grows slowly.

– Bourbeau was diagnosed with leukemia in 1998.

– Bakhtiar died on October 18, 2020 in Chicago, Illinois from leukemia at the age of 82.

– Agnew died of leukemia in Berlin, Maryland.

– Dworkin died from leukemia on February 14, 2013 in London, England.

– Most cases of leukemia are treated with many drugs, which are usually combined into a chemotherapy program.

– Bush, the 43rd President, Jeb Bush, former Governor of Florida, Neil Bush, Marvin Bush, and the late Robin Bush, who died of leukemia in 1953.

– On August 21, 2003, Willis died due to complications from chronic myelogenous leukemia in Skokie, Illinois.

– Thurmond died at the age of 74 on July 16, 2016 after a short battle with leukemia in San Francisco.

– Petsalnikos died of leukemia on 13 March 2020 in Athens, aged 69.

- She was diagnosed with leukemia and died on 20 September 1999 at Münster University Hospital in Germany, aged 67.

- Matthiessen died on April 5, 2014 from leukemia in Sagaponack, New YorkSagaponack, New York, aged 86.

– Because Gertrude discovered and tested these drugs, most children with Leukemia can now be cured.

– He died of leukemia on August 18, 1990, and is buried in Mount Auburn Cemetery, Cambridge, Massachusetts.

– The causes of most types of leukemia are not known.

– Rukavina died of leukemia on January 7, 2019 at a hospital in Minneapolis, aged 68.

– Duerod died on November 13, 2020 in Detroit, Michigan from leukemia at the age of 84.

– Rivas died from leukemia on 9 January 2016, aged 57.

– He died on December 16, 1980 in Louisville, Kentucky from leukemia and pneumonia.

– Kaufmann died on 28 March 2017 in Munich from leukemia at the age of 72.

– This helped them realize that diseased bone marrow could also be destroyed with radiation, which was a very important step in figuring out that leukemia can be treated with bone marrow transplants.

– Wilson died of complications from leukemia on October 6, 2018 in Los Angeles, California, aged 76.

– Travers died on September 16, 2009 from complications of bone marrow transplant due to leukemia in Danbury, Connecticut at the age of 72.

– She died of leukemia in New York City.

– She treated Leukemia and Herpes.

– Human T-lymphotropic virus causes leukemia as well as other diseases.

– Without treatment, leukemia may lead to death within weeks, months, or years.

– On August 5, 2018, Rabinowitz died from leukemia in Manhattan, aged 64.

– Serum is an important part of the self-renewal of embryonic stem cells when combined with the cytokine leukemia inhibitory factor.

– DeLuca died from leukemia on September 14, 2015 in Lauderdale Lakes, FloridaLauderdale Lakes, Florida.

– Rosalynn’s father died of leukemia when she was 13.

– Nunn died of leukemia at his home in Pittsburgh’s Hill District on September 24, 2016, aged 62.

– Sager was diagnosed with acute myeloid leukemia in 2014.

– He remained in prison until he died of leukemia in Lyon.

– Riaz died of leukemia in 1972.

Use the word “practise”

How to use in-sentence of “practise”:

+ It can be quite painful to practise them a lot.

+ Kunnamthanam organized mass yoga practise with 5,000 people.

+ Majority of the population of the district practise Hinduism.

+ Most citizens are Roman Catholics, but only about 20% practise it.

+ Saint-Saëns makes them seem rather stupid as they practise their scales.

Use the word practise
Use the word practise

Example sentences of “practise”:

+ In 1540–1541 he visited the famous medical university of Montpellier, took his degree of doctor of medicine at Basel, and then settled down to practise at Zürich, where he obtained the post of lecturer in physics at the Carolinum, the precursor of the University of Zürich.

+ People who are playing on their own can practise with a metronome to help them to play to a steady beat.

+ The Constitution of 1992 provides for the equality of citizens of all faiths as well as the freedom to practise any religion.

+ John Chrysostom wrote that unlike other pagan rulers of the Romans, Philip was tolerant to the Christians and let them practise their faith openly.

+ This is why it is so useful to practise scales.

+ It is a good way to build parks in practise for the ‘Career Mode’.

+ She attended Oustass Keita Dara, where she learned to practise her religion, Islam.

+ For example: when he was young violinists and cellists were taught to practise with a book under the right arm.

+ Students at music colleges will also practise orchestration by taking piano music and arranging it for orchestra.

+ Historically, money lending had been a fairly common occupation among Jews, perhaps because Christians were not allowed to practise usury.

+ Potts finished his book with the words: “Thus were these poore Innocent creatures, by the great care and paines of this honourable Judge, delivered from the danger of this Conspiracie; this bloudie practise of the Priest laid open”.

+ It is a good idea for people who play keyboard instruments or other kinds of transposing instruments to practise transposing.

+ They could be put one on top of another so that an organist could practise music written for a two-manual organ.

+ Sometimes they even had pedals for organists to practise this skill.

+ Cula-sila deals with the Ten Precepts to be practised by devout buddhists, while Majjhima-sila gives a detailed description of the practice of the sixth, seventh, eighth, and ninth precepts, together with the practise of plant conservation and speech etiquette.

+ The school also has a specialised music corridor for students to practise their instruments this leads straight into the hall.

+ It was used as a practice instrument by harpsichord players, or by organists who wanted to practise at home instead of in a church.

+ There young players can practise their skills.

+ There are various faiths that practise same-sex marriages, including Eckankar, Wicca, Unitarian Universalism, Raelism, and Native American religions with a two-spirit tradition.

+ He often travelled to Bradford to practise alongside professional player Joe Johnson.

+ In 1540–1541 he visited the famous medical university of Montpellier, took his degree of doctor of medicine at Basel, and then settled down to practise at Zürich, where he obtained the post of lecturer in physics at the Carolinum, the precursor of the University of Zürich.

+ People who are playing on their own can practise with a metronome to help them to play to a steady beat.